f
fa
fb
fd
fe
ff
fg
fh
fi
fj
fl
fm
fn
fo
fp
fr
fs
ft
fu
fw
fx
fy
Перевод: fictitious
[прилагательное] вымышленный; воображаемый; фиктивный; взятый из романа
Тезаурус:
- But the play, because it wants its bread buttered on both sides, keeps its options open until the end on the issue of whether she is genuinely taken in by her husband's lie or whether her insistence that the girl stay the weekend, her broody concern for the future of the fictitious baby, and marriage-broking on behalf of Julie are just ways of stoking up Jacques's embarrassment.
- Fictitious precision though is just one of many ways in which managers can be misled by numbers.
- Through the Double Cross Committee, usually known as the XX Committee, these turned spies sent back to Germany a steady stream of fictitious information garnished with sufficient truth to give it credibility, which the Germans apparently accepted without question.
- Police said the name John Haydon was fictitious, but the address was genuine.
- An Army spokesman said the documents were of low classification and details of IRA activities in them were "purely fictitious".
- Opposite the title page was the inscription: "All the characters in this book are fictitious including the author."
- SPECIALS focuses on the lives of five ordinary men and women who are part-time officers in the Special Constabulary (the fictitious Division "S" in West Midlands).
- fictitious Caribbean island, scene of a pirate attack and staunch defence by Royal Marines.
- In the real world that science purports to describe there are only fictitious helices.
- The fictitious example being used here is not the easiest one to explain to an informant, but many much more difficult ones have been explained and interviews obtained.
- The following streets and buildings are mentioned or described under their real names or under fictitious ones: the Castle ( PP 2; CS 7); the Cathedral ( PP 2; MED passim ) and its Gatehouse (Jasper's residence, MED 2 et seq .
- Finally this relationship may simply be fictitious, arising from observations with an inappropriately sized sphygmomanometer cuff (Ragan Bordley, 1941; King, 1967; Maxwell et al, 1982).
- fictitious precision
|